Date and Time
Tuesday December 12, 2017
10:00 am-11:30 am
Japan Standard Time
Location
Tokyo
Tuesday December 12, 2017
10:00 am-11:30 am
Japan Standard Time
Tokyo
Climate change impacts, disruptive new technologies, and the changing nature of work are just some of the changes profoundly reshaping the landscape for business and sustainability. In the face of such rapid and complex change, futures thinking offers a powerful tool to challenge current assumptions, engage with uncertainty, and create more resilient strategies.
This event will explore some of the most significant changes and introduce participants to futures thinking techniques. We will explore how strategic foresight methodologies such as scenario planning can help companies engage with uncertain futures and develop more strategic and sustainable responses.
Dynamism in the materiality of ESG issues is increasing. Here's how your company can stress-test your materiality assessment against future scenarios.
BSR’s Sustainable Futures Lab is launching The Fast Forward, a new quarterly publication exploring emerging issues at the nexus of business and sustainability.
The COVID-19 pandemic—and resulting economic, political, and social crisis—is the most profound global disruption in decades. To help our members, partners, and community navigate this uncertain time, BSR is publishing a set of three scenarios, each depicting a different possible future in 2025.
Retail is changing in complex ways, and the future will look quite different from today. We need to prepare now for new challenges, but also for new opportunities to drive more sustainable consumption patterns, promote diversity and inclusion, and meet emerging consumer needs.
Futures thinking is an invaluable tool in informing and testing strategies for the next era of globalization.
Futures and strategic foresight methodologies offer a new way to promote respect for human rights and the freedoms they protect.
Everything you need to know about implementing the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD).
During times of rapid change, the greatest danger lies in being unable to imagine radically different futures.